
'The Cobra' Dave Parker prayed to live one more month. MLB legend's legacy lives on.
Dave Parker, his mind still sharp but his body failing, kept pleading.
One more month, he prayed.
Please, let him be healthy enough to get to Cooperstown, New York, to be inducted July 27 into Baseball's Hall of Fame.
If not, at least keep him alive so he could hear his son present his speech.
He fought so courageously since hearing the news in December that he was elected to the Hall of Fame. He was in and out of physical rehab centers these past six months, losing part of his leg battling this dreadful Parkinson's disease, leaving him confined to a wheelchair.
DAVE PARKER: Social media reacts to MLB, Pirates legend's death
Two weeks ago, when he left his last rehab center, he was informed nothing more could be done.
Hospice intervened.
And on Saturday morning, the man they called "The Cobra," was gone.
Parker was 74.
'Man, I am crushed," former Oakland Athletics teammate Dave Stewart, one of Parker's closest friends, told USA TODAY Sports. 'He's one of the greatest teammates I've ever had. He had such a presence when he walked into the room.
'He was always the biggest in the room with his size (6-foot-3, 230 pounds)," Stewart said, 'but when you add in his personality, he's suddenly 7 feet tall. Just an unbelievable human being and was so charismatic. Everyone loved him."
Barry Meister, Parker's long-time agent, called him one of the greatest personalities in baseball history.
'There was no player in baseball with more magnetism than Dave Parker," Meister said. 'The hair on your arms would stand up when he walked into that room. Everyone was aware that The Man had arrived."
Parker, the former MVP, seven-time All-Star, three-time Gold Glove winner, two-time batting champion and two-time World Series champion, was nearly as well-known for his swagger and friendly braggadocio as his accomplishments.
He created the phrase: 'When the leaves turn brown, I'll be wearing the batting crown."
And he would drop: "The sun is going to shine, the wind is going to blow, and Dave is going to go 4-for-4.'
He once wore a Star of David necklace, and when asked about it since he wasn't Jewish, he said, 'I'm a David. And I'm a star"
When notified in December that he and Dick Allen were voted in by the Classic Baseball Era Committee into the Hall of Fame, his initial reaction was, 'Why did it take so long?"
Few in the game of baseball had Parker's personality. He was one of the first professional athletes to wear an earring, a two-carat diamond earring. He was the first baseball player to earn $1 million per season. And he was among the first who was unafraid to bring a powerful personality into a clubhouse.
'He probably had more impact on young players," former Cincinnati Reds teammate Eric Davis said in a statement, 'than any player I've ever been around.'
Davis was too distraught to talk, heartbroken that his close friend wouldn't be in Cooperstown. So many friends and family members already planned trips, but even without Parker's presence, most plan to still go, making sure everyone is aware of the impact he had on their lives.
Kellye, Parker's wife, expressed to many of them Saturday how terribly difficult life has been for Parker these past few months. They're comforted knowing he is now in a better place. No more pain. No more doctors. No more Parkinson's.
'He was having such a hard time," Stewart said. 'He had the ability to stand up, but not stand up for long periods of time. I remember when I talked to him after he got elected, I told him how happy I was for him, that it was long overdue, and how it should have happened long ago.
'All he could really say is, 'Thank you Stew. I appreciate it. I love you brother.'
'I knew he was happy, but when you have Parkinson's, you can't really tell the emotion in people."
Parker was diagnosed in 2012, and his family chooses to remember the good times: the healthy Parker, the vibrant Parker, and, oh, the hysterical Parker.
'He was always so funny," Stewart said. 'He had you laughing all day. Parker had all of the leadership qualities, but he knew how to keep a clubhouse loose. In the worst of times, he always found something inspiring to say. In your personal worst of times, he would always make you laugh at yourself."
Said Meister: 'He was the funniest guy who ever played the game. He always had insults."
The last time Parker saw Stewart, he noticed that Stewart was wearing a black shirt, black pants and a black jacket, blending in with his skin color, and blurted out: 'Man, go put some clothes on! Why you walking around here naked?"
Oh, and he had nicknames for everyone.
Pitcher Greg Cadaret: 'Dippy," for his big chin.
Catcher Terry Steinbach: 'Home plate face."
Pitcher Dennis Eckersley: 'Pretty Pony."
'I remember the time he and John Candelaria met up one night in spring training," Meister said, 'and they really got after it. They hit the town hard. Well, Dave comes in the next day, and goes to sleep on the trainer's table.
'They wanted him to pinch-hit late in the game, so they woke him up, he goes to the plate, and he hits this monstrous home run. The reporters asked him after the game, 'What did you hit Dave? Was that a fastball? A curveball? What was it?'
'Dave says, 'Well, I couldn't really see. It looked like the guy was throwing three baseballs at once. So, I just swung at the middle one.'
That was Parker, always full of life, always colorful, and oh, so talented. He hit 22 home runs with a team-leading 97 RBIs when he helped lead the A's to the 1989 World Series. He was 38 years old.
'They just don't make them like that anymore," Meister said. 'They really don't. He's one-of-a-kind. Believe me, everybody in baseball took a loss for this one."
'Yes," says Stewart, 'but we're all better for having known him, and being such good friends with him.
'He will never be forgotten."
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Forbes
22 minutes ago
- Forbes
Rays Broadcaster Dewayne Staats Beat The Bushes And Got His Break 50 Seasons Ago
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. Dewayne Staats emcees Tampa Bay Rays' Hall of Fame ceremonies on Sunday, ... More September 1, 2024. (Davida Franklin / Tampa Bay Rays) Dewayne Staats said he is not a numbers person. He can make an exception, though, when it comes to 50. It is a number that fits him very nicely during this 2025 baseball season. 'I have always associated 50 years with being married 50 years, like my grandparents,' he said. 'I remember they had a big cake with the number 50 on top and all of the family members gathered around. For me, that was always what 50 meant. It is a good round number.' The marriage between Staats and the broadcast booth reached that golden milestone this season, including what is now all 28 seasons with the Tampa Bay Rays. Staats, who turns 73 in August, continues to enjoy each game while marking his scorebook with the plays he effortlessly call for Rays fans who have long enjoyed a familiar voice, a familiar face. And for how much longer? 'My feeling is, we'll see how I feel,' said Staats, who is traveling less this season. 'I have a grandson who is going to be a junior in college, another a senior in high school and a (granddaughter) who is going to be a freshman in high school. You have to think about that.' A trip to Maryland to see his grandson pitch in a summer collegiate league beckons during what for him will be an extended all-star break. It will give Staats time to do such things before the back end of the Rays' schedule kicks in. 'It's nice to have some time this summer,' said the husband of Carla, father of Stephanie and Alexandra, both from his marriage to Dee, who passed away from cancer in 2005. 'I think it's the right thing to do because we are only here so long. How could I justify sitting in a hotel room in some city when you can see one of your grandchildren do something? If I can incorporate them into that time off, I think that's important.' Baseball on the radio Staats grew up with a transistor radio often serving as his best friend, especially on summer evenings when voices from major league stadiums throughout the Midwest and points beyond provided the perfect soundtrack at time when box scores in the morning newspaper made for eagerly anticipated reading. From the family home in East Alton, Ill., 35 miles outside St. Louis, Staats was in 'Cardinal territory' listening to Jack Buck and Harry Caray on KMOX. The Redbirds, though, were merely an appetizer. 'We were situated in a really great area because, at night, I found the Colts .45s, and then the Astros, out of WWL in New Orleans,' he recalled. 'I could get the Pirates on KDKA and broadcasts of the Reds, Cubs and White Sox. I was all over the dial at night.' Staats, who was hooked listening to Gene Elston call Colt .45s and Astros games, was a pitcher in high school. Knowing he was not going to be the next Robin Roberts, Staats abandoned the fastball in favor of the fast lane in an attempt to make a career of broadcasting baseball games. During summer breaks while attending Southern Illinois-Edwardsville, he and his buddy, Frank Akers, who would have a lengthy broadcast career in St. Louis, would beat the bushes. 'We would jump in our cars and drive all around the minor leagues,' he said. 'In those years, we were just trying to make contacts, trying to meet people so they knew I existed in the hope of getting a shot.' Staats got a shot in 1972 when the highway took him to Indianapolis for a game against Oklahoma City, which was in its final season as the Astros' Triple-A affiliate. He met OKC play-by-play guy Larry Calton, who offered an instant audition. In fact, Staats found himself alone in the booth at one point. 'I think there was probably an usherette he was interested in, so he said, 'I am going to take two innings off and you call the game,'' he recalled. 'So, I did a couple of innings. Nobody paid me, but I did a couple of innings because Larry Calton went AWOL.' Calton left for another job resulting in a vacancy in Oklahoma City, which became an Indians' affiliate in 1973. Staats pestered general manager Dick King, who was seeking a deal with a new radio station. 'Finally, he told me to come visit,' said Staats. 'He said they did not have a deal with a station yet, but that I could do other stuff with the team.' King struck a deal with a station and Staats, while still a college student, spent the summers of 1973 and 1974 calling games of the Oklahoma City 89ers. The team's roster included future Indians and broadcasters Rick Manning and Duane Kuiper. True to King's word, Staats did far more than call games. 'Doing a broadcast was like recess,' he said. 'I was distributing tickets, painting the ballpark, cleaning the ballpark and writing whatever release just to get a chance to be on the air and say that I have done Triple-A baseball.' 'Don't Worry Kid' After receiving his degree from SIU-Edwardsville in 1975, Staats went to work as a sports reporter at KPLR-TV in St. Louis. Thanks to his diligence, he was at the station for only a couple of years. He had been in contact with Elston, writing letters and visiting him at Busch Stadium when the Astros were in the Gateway City. They struck a nice relationship and, one day in 1976, Staats called Elston and was told Bob Prince, the long-time voice of the Pirates on KDKA before moving to Houston, would not return the following season. Elston asked Staats if he could come to Chicago when the Astros visited the Cubs at Wrigley Field that June for what turned out to be an on-air audition. Staats arrived at Wrigley and while going through the lineups in media dining prior to the game, Elston approached with words of wisdom. 'He sat down and said, 'Don't worry kid, we will (screw) it up together,'' said Staats, laughing at the memory from 50 seasons ago. 'Gene was an angel in my life, helping me get an opportunity.' Staats got the job and worked Astros games on a regular basis from 1977 to 1984. On April 7, 1979, Houston righthander Ken Forsch no-hit Atlanta, the first of 10 no-hitters he has called in his career. ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — A pitcher in high school, Dewayne Staats shows off his form throwing out the ... More first pitch before a game against the Houston Astros and the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field on September 19, 2022. (Tyler Schank / Tampa Bay Rays) Cubs, Yankees, ESPN Wrigley Field became Staats' home ballpark after he was hired to call Cubs games, which he did on television and radio 1985 to 1989 after WGN let go of Milo Hamilton, who ended up taking Staats' place in Houston. Staats was teamed on radio with Lou Boudreau, then in his late-sixties, and Vince Lloyd. He did six innings on radio before trading places with Caray to join Steve Stone on the TV side for the duration. 'Vince and Lou were great,' he said. 'We had a great crew and Lou was my primary partner on radio. I loved working with Lou, and he continued to travel the first couple of years I was with the Cubs.' Staats also worked with Jim Frey in 1987 when the latter was between stints as the club's manager and general manager. Former American League infielder Dave Nelson joined Staats in 1988 when Frey became the GM. 'Davey became my partner for two years and he was a really wonderful guy,' said Staats. A wonderful opportunity seemed to present itself for the 1988 season, one that would allow Staats to continue with the Cubs. ESPN wanted to team him with Jon Miller and Gary Thorne to call its game of the week. However, it was not meant to be. At least not yet. 'WGN would not let me do that,' he said. 'They had that old-line exclusive type of mindset. That became a sticking point for me.' Meanwhile, the Yankees entered an unprecedented deal with the Madison Square Garden Network effective the 1989 season. Staats was contacted by network president Bob Gutkowski about becoming a member of the broadcast crew. Staats, though, had one year remaining on his deal with WGN. 'Bob said, 'Do your final year and we will talk again,'' recalled Staats. 'I did the 1989 season with the Cubs, he called and said, 'Here's the deal.'' Staats spent the next five seasons working Yankees broadcasts with Tony Kubek. What made his time with the Yankees most appealing was that he did not have to relocate. That was huge given Stephanie, who is married to former Tampa Bay pitcher Dan Wheeler, and Alexandra were young. 'They wanted me to come up and look for a house,' he said. 'My girls were still little and I was not crazy about living in New York, though I went up and looked at homes in New Jersey and Connecticut.' Dee had a sister on Florida's east coast not too far from where the Yankees trained in Fort Lauderdale. Staats had a home built in the area so family members could be in close proximity and he could easily get to and from spring training. As for the regular season, the family did not have to move. MSG put Staats up at the Regency on Park Avenue. He and Kubek worked roughly 120 games per season and MSG paid for them to fly home – Staats to Florida and Kubek to Wisconsin – during breaks in the schedule. 'They put us in first class and I was thinking, 'This is nuts,'' he said. 'They did that for five years before they started to run out of money.' It was 1995 when Staats finally landed the ESPN gig handling baseball with Buck Martinez and Reggie Jackson while also doing college football and college basketball for the network that employed him for three years before MLB expanded in 1998. 'That was a good time and I worked with a lot of good people,' he said. 'While my time with ESPN went well, I had a yearning to get back into the day-to-day rhythm of calling games.' ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. - Dewayne Staats and Brian Anderson (r) before calling a 2024 game from the ... More left field stands at Tropicana Field. (Davida Franklin / Tampa Bay Rays) Tampa Bay & BA Staats joined the expansion Tampa Bay Devil Rays in 1998 and was paired with former pitcher Joe Magrane, with whom he called College World Series games at ESPN. They would share the booth for 11 seasons. 'I enjoyed the time with him,' said Staats, who was enshrined in the St. Louis Sports Hall of Fame in 2024. 'I thought he was really good when we worked together at ESPN, and he was really good (with Tampa Bay.)' With Magrane leaving for the MLB Network, Kevin Kennedy was brought on board in 2009 to split analyst duties with former pitcher Brian Anderson, who worked six games in 2008 following an attempt to resume a career derailed by multiple arm injuries. Anderson, who was also the Rays' assistant pitching coach in 2008 and 2009, got his feet wet in the broadcast business in 2007 with Cleveland. Among those he worked with was Manning, 34 years after Staats called Oklahoma City games with him in the lineup. 'Amazing how things work out sometimes,' said the southpaw, who won 82 games in an MLB career that included a World Series title with the Diamondbacks in 2001. Anderson worked 50 road games in 2010 and was alongside Todd Kalas on the pregame set at home. His first season on a fulltime basis was 2011, though the relationship he built with Staats began with the first of his six games in 2008, one he felt did not go well. 'I was trying to match Dewayne's personality and I wasn't being myself,' he said of a 13-inning affair in Oakland that May. 'I was miserable. I was thinking, 'Thank goodness it is only six games.'' Anderson's lament was brief, thanks to Staats' counsel. 'The next day, I spoke to Dewayne about how I felt,' he recalled. 'He said, 'Listen, be yourself. Don't worry about me. I am going to be myself and you be yourself, whatever that is.'' Staats' soothing words removed the vice that gripped his partner's mind. 'With that bit of advice, it went from being awful in the first game to having an absolute blast in the second game,' said Anderson. 'Suddenly, I am thinking, 'This is going to be a lot of fun.'' It has been a lot of fun and then some thanks to their ability to play off one another. 'Our personalities are the perfect match because I can get high strung and ranting and Dewayne is very mild mannered,' he said. 'He is the perfect foil for me. I think that is why we work so well together because it is good cop, bad cop.' The relationship goes beyond the call of a game, something Anderson appreciates immensely. 'He is like a father figure who provides wonderful advice,' he said. 'He knows more about my life than most people on the planet. Maybe my mother knows more, but that would be about it.' It is such relationships that are not uncommon in baseball given the number of days, weeks and months the sport occupies on the calendar. 'I think, in this business, that if you do it well and do it long enough, special relationships develop,' said Staats. 'I always felt baseball replicates life because it is day-to-day during a long season. Working with 'BA' has been great. Not only does he have the ability to get to the point, but it is also his personality and the human side.' Anderson's professional career spans 33 seasons. Does he have another 17 in him? 'I can't even imagine,' he laughed as he reflected on the day in 1993 that he left Wright State in Dayton, Ohio to commence his career. 'It has been fantastic working with Dewayne. When I think back to the handful of games I did in 2008, it is incredible how many years I have been sitting next to him. The other thing is that the time has absolutely flown by, and that is because of the fun we have working together.'


Fox Sports
26 minutes ago
- Fox Sports
A-Rod and Jeter Are Back For the Relaunch of Backyard Baseball '01
Derek Jeter. Alex Rodriguez. Pablo Sanchez. All three of baseball's most iconic figures will be playable in the relaunch of Backyard Baseball '01 this summer. Backyard Baseball '01, the follow-up to the beloved Backyard Baseball '97, will be relaunched on Steam and mobile devices on July 8 by children's and family entertainment company Playground Productions. This comes after Backyard Baseball '97 was released for the first time on consoles in June. In addition to FOX Sports' own Jeter and Rodriguez, 28 of the original 31 MLB Pros are returning to the game, including Sammy Sosa, Mark McGwire, and Cal Ripken, Jr. Backyard Baseball '01 will also include official MLB marks, including usage of individual team logos, names and likeness. Mega Cat Studios, which developed the other Backyard games relaunched over the past year with Playground Productions, including Backyard Soccer '98, will develop '01 as well. Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account, follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily ! recommended Get more from Major League Baseball Follow your favorites to get information about games, news and more in this topic

Miami Herald
29 minutes ago
- Miami Herald
Angel Reese sets WNBA rebounds mark, offense ‘finally coming through'
June 30 (UPI) -- Angel Reese continues to pull down rebounds at a WNBA record rate, but says she also is recovered from a "terrible" offensive start and is "finally coming through" for the Chicago Sky. Reese made the comments in her postgame news conference after totaling a game-high 24 points, 16 rebounds, seven assists, two blocks and a steal in a 92-85 win over the Los Angeles Sparks on Sunday in Los Angeles. "I went through a storm for the first eight games where I couldn't finish and it was frustrating," Reese said. "But I trusted my work and my teammates trusted my work. "I'm finally coming through and finally finishing efficiently and it's leading to wins for us." With her 16 rebounds, Reese became the first player in WNBA history to collect at least 15 rebounds in four consecutive games. Her record rebounding streak started June 22, with a 19-board performance. She followed that game with 17- and 18-rebound efforts before setting a new WNBA record against the Sparks. Reese scored 18 points in the second half, including 11 in the fourth quarter of Sunday's win. She went 10 of 19 from the floor. The All-Star forward went just 21 of 68 from the floor through her first seven games this season, making 30.9% of her attempts. Reese is shooting 47.1% (48 of 102) over nine appearances since then. She shot at a 48.9% clip over her last three starts. The Sky went 2-5 during Reese's seven-game slump, when she averaged 9.1 points, 12.3 rebounds, 2.6 assists and 1.6 steals per game. They are 3-4 over her last seven games, when she averaged 15.1 points, 13.6 rebounds, 5.3 assists, 2.0 steals and 1.0 blocks. "I struggled in the first eight or nine games in not being where I should have been," Reese said. "Obviously, it happens. I was very hard on myself, tough conversations with myself, tough conversations with people that kept it real with me in telling me what I can get to work on and need to be better at and also getting into a new role. "This is the first time in a long time I'm being a point guard and being a 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 and guarding all five positions too. Just trying to come out with that, but I trust my work. I have great conversations with [WNBA legend] Lisa Leslie, talk to [former Sky coach] Teresa Weatherspoon every day. Just being able to have great people in my corner that really push me and know my potential." The Sky trailed by as many as seven points in the third quarter before rallying to earn their second win in three games. They outshot the Sparks 48.5% to 41.7%, including a 42.3% to 32.1% edge in 3-point shooting. Veteran guard Ariel Atkins totaled 20 points in the victory. Fellow guards Kia Nurse and Rachel Banham and forward/center Elizabeth Williams chipped in 14, 13 and 12 points, respectively, for the Sky. Reese, whose 24 points were the second-most scored Sunday by any WNBA player, is now averaging 12.4 points and a WNBA-high 12.6 rebounds per game this season. She made 40.6% of her shots through her first 16 appearances of 2025, an improvement from her .391 shooting percentage as a rookie. "I'm just trusting my work," Reese said. "I put my head down every day and just grind. That's all I do. I don't do it for cameras. I don't do it for publicity. I don't post me in the gym and I'm not going to. I put my head down every day and work. I'm very versatile in what I do on and off the court and I prioritize when I'm at work. When I'm at work it's time for work. "I come here every day and try to do everything for my teammates. ... It means a lot to me to be named with such great players and just continue to know I can be better every day and continue to be great." The Sky (5-11), who sit in 10th place in the WNBA standings, will take on the first-place Minnesota Lynx (14-2) at 7 p.m. EDT Sunday in Minneapolis. Copyright 2025 UPI News Corporation. All Rights Reserved.